Hydraulics would with very little doubt be way too cumbersome and heavy to mount in the wing, besides rather slow with the long lines.Ferraripilot wrote:By the look of it, I assumed a servo and adjoining mechanism is actuating the unit. Wouldn't a hydraulic unit be slower and difficult to package in that area?
You talking about the same hydraulic sytem which can change gears in milliseconds?? I belive hydraulics would definately be the faster solution because there is no lag due to the build up of pressure in a compressible medium like there is with air.xpensive wrote:Hydraulics would with very little doubt be way too cumbersome and heavy to mount in the wing, besides rather slow with the long lines
Plus the hydraulic pressure is already available on tap fairly nearby from the compressor in the enginge bay. No need for a gas bottle that way..Tim.Wright wrote:Where on earth are you going to put a balance around the flap pivot??
In terms of packaging its practically the same. I dont see why you think hydraulics are so bulky. An electro-magnetic valve, a couple of tubes and a smaal actuator. Whats the difference?
Electric step motor solution or micro switch will be heavier than a thin tube will oil in it. Renault have hydraulic, so do Williams and Ferrari.forty-two wrote:Plus the hydraulic pressure is already available on tap fairly nearby from the compressor in the enginge bay. No need for a gas bottle that way..Tim.Wright wrote:Where on earth are you going to put a balance around the flap pivot??
In terms of packaging its practically the same. I dont see why you think hydraulics are so bulky. An electro-magnetic valve, a couple of tubes and a smaal actuator. Whats the difference?
But arguably, they'd need a greater overall volume of hydraulic fluid, and running lines high up into the RW would push the CG slightly rearwards and upwards from it's optimum.
I reckon some sort of electrical solution is probably the lightest option and the easiest to package.
Ballscrew on a stepper wouldn't have much trouble at all...n smikle wrote:A motor/brake needed to push up the wing against aero resistance would need substaintial gearing.